Metallica Show S&M Tribute with a Symphony Orchestra

Metallica Show S&M Tribute with a Symphony Orchestra A team of professionals has dared to revive the legendary show, combine heavy metal with a symphony Even Metallica themselves hadn't played them this way!

In April 1999 american conductor Michael Kamen together with Metallica recorded a unique concert called S&M - Symphony and Metallica. Worldwide-known rockers backed by a San-Francisco Symphony played 21 song before the multi-thousand crowd. Because of complex arrangments the show had to be split in two days. Later the band and the famour conducted received a Grammy for "The Call of Ktulu" track, a

nd the double DVD became a cult. But the most intriguing fact about that concert was that it became unique literally! Even that the DVD turned multi-platinum, the band never tried to repeat that show. In a few years Michael Kamen died, and all hopes for this kind of a live show dissappeared. Moreover, it turned out to be the final recording of Jason Newsted as a Metallica bassist, and after that release the most famous rock band in the world got submerged into hiatus.

15 years later, a lot of fans would like to get a feeling of that legendary show, but the complexity of this grandiose performance scares off even professional show producers. But after longsome thinking, creative work over supercomplex arrangements, orchestral rehearsals, tiresome castings, creation of sound and light decors, a team of like-minded professionals dares to revive the legendary show, combine heavy metal with a symphony orchestra and to breathe a new life into classical hit singles: Nothing Else Matters, Enter Sandman, Master of Puppets...

Metallica Show went through dozens of rehearsals with comnpletely different set-ups - starting from a virtuoso quartet to a full 60-man symphonic orchestra. Persistent work of four top-level arrangers, a conductor and rock musicians allowed us to align every single note - bearing in mind that there are several thousand pages of scores! The heroes of the night are already reknown musicians not only in Russia; the audience always meets them with delight. It's not an exaggeration: some fans prefer Metallica Show over Metallica itself! With a few dozens of gigs in Russia the show boasts more than 35 thousand tickets sold. After 5000+ people in Crocus City Hall the show returned to the heart of Moscow, the most prestigious and famous music hall in Russia - the Kremlin Palace. Six thousand seats, superb lighting, but, most importantly - the sound of incredible clarity and power. Naturally the S&M songs are performed, but the real zest of the show are additional Metallica songs with special orchestral arrangements never heard before. Moreover, despite of the show complexity, the original two-day concert is performed at once throughout the overwhelming 2 hour production. We have to mention that the show is held in English to match it with the best international music shows - and the project advances worldwide in 2018 already: the shows are planned in Paris, Prague, Mexico and Santiago. Don't miss your chance to listen to a classic Metallica concert with the best possible production!

🌍🤘 Wherever I May RoamThis song sounds like a manifesto of freedom, where true wealth lies not in material possessions, ...
28/05/2026

🌍🤘 Wherever I May Roam

This song sounds like a manifesto of freedom, where true wealth lies not in material possessions, but in the experience of wandering.

The intro—opening with the resonant boom of a gong—instantly transports you to another world, serving as a clarion call to a grand adventure. 🥁
And in the symphonic version from the *S*M* album, it becomes nearly seven minutes of epic, marching grandeur: riffs and orchestra intertwine to form a monolithic wall of sound. 🎻⚡

🔥 Insider Fact: This track became a signature staple of early 90s concerts and even lent its name to an entire tour—the *Wherever We May Roam* Tour!



💭 Which of your own journeys or life stages does this track remind you of? 🗺

Louder than just music. Deeper than just emotion.On the surface, it’s simply about not having to pay for a music streami...
24/05/2026

Louder than just music. Deeper than just emotion.

On the surface, it’s simply about not having to pay for a music streaming subscription. But scientists at the New York Academy of Sciences have documented a phenomenon known as "collective solitude": hundreds of hearts in the audience beating in perfect unison.

🎻 Especially when the orchestra—and those low frequencies—kick in. The cellos and kick drums physically attune your body through sheer impact. You cease to be a mere crowd; you become a single, unified organism.

And now, for the most important part.

The very moment the guitarist *lives* the riff, mirror neurons fire within your brain. You aren't just watching the performance—you are playing it out inside yourself.

It is into this deep darkness—this cerebral surge of pure drive—that oxytocin is released.
➞ Fear dissipates.
➞ Masks fall away.
➞ The inner critic falls silent.

It seems this is precisely why we attend live concerts: for sensations that simply cannot be downloaded or conjured up in solitude.

It is difficult to imagine another band so fiercely adored—and just as fiercely criticized for every deviation from the ...
20/05/2026

It is difficult to imagine another band so fiercely adored—and just as fiercely criticized for every deviation from the path. It was precisely this intensity of passion—this blend of love and rejection—that gave birth to albums that turned the world of metal upside down. From their very first hit to their symphonic experiments, it is all one grand story.

🎸 The UnforgivenIn 1991, the legendary *Black Album* featured a song that stood apart from everything Metallica had done...
15/05/2026

🎸 The Unforgiven

In 1991, the legendary *Black Album* featured a song that stood apart from everything Metallica had done before.

A slow intro, a song structure unusual for the band, James Hetfield’s restrained vocals, and a palpable sense of internal conflict running through the entire track. For Metallica, it was a risk—and it was precisely this risk that transformed "The Unforgiven" into one of the band's most recognizable compositions.

Later, the song spawned two sequels: "The Unforgiven II" and "The Unforgiven III"—a rare occurrence in heavy metal, where a single narrative unfolds across three separate tracks.

Some fans draw parallels between the lyrics and Ayn Rand’s novella *Anthem*; indeed, the themes of societal pressure, the suppression of individuality, and the struggle to break free from imposed constraints truly resonate with the mood of the track. However, the musicians themselves have never offered a detailed explanation of the song's meaning.

💭 What does "The Unforgiven" mean to you?
Is it a song about an internal struggle? About guilt? About the inability to truly be oneself?

Highlights from the performance by the Metallica Show S*M Tribute project.📸 Tyumen, April 3, 2026Photos: Andrey Dunik   ...
06/05/2026

Highlights from the performance by the Metallica Show S*M Tribute project.

📸 Tyumen, April 3, 2026

Photos: Andrey Dunik

03/05/2026

📍 April 25, 2026 — StupinoFamous hits reimagined in combination with symphonic sound.
19/04/2026

📍 April 25, 2026 — Stupino

Famous hits reimagined in combination with symphonic sound.

🔥 TOP 3 UNEXPECTED FACTS ABOUT THE HITS THAT WILL BE PLAYED AT THE SHOW🤘 "Sad But True" was born thanks to... a broken g...
28/03/2026

🔥 TOP 3 UNEXPECTED FACTS ABOUT THE HITS THAT WILL BE PLAYED AT THE SHOW

🤘 "Sad But True" was born thanks to... a broken guitar
The riff of "Sad But True" was born when James Hetfield's guitar broke—he switched to a lower-tuned instrument and accidentally hit that "fateful" sound. The vocalist called the song "the essence of Metallica": slow, heavy, and absolutely irresistible.

🐒 ...and the monkeys confirmed it
In 2009, scientists conducted an experiment: they played different music to tamarin monkeys. The works of Samuel Barber, Nine Inch Nails, and Tool left them indifferent. But when "Of Wolf and Man" came on, the monkeys noticeably calmed down. Scientific fact: Metallica riffs even work on primates.

📀 "The Memory Remains" Contains a Marilyn Monroe Reference
The line at the end of the song, "Say yes, at least say hello," is a quote from Marilyn Monroe's last completed film, "The Misfits" (1961). James Hetfield added it to enhance the track's fading glory.

🔥 SEEK AND DESTROY: A Soundtrack to Inner ApocalypseThis isn't just a song—it's a clenched fist of rage. It's like hell ...
25/03/2026

🔥 SEEK AND DESTROY: A Soundtrack to Inner Apocalypse

This isn't just a song—it's a clenched fist of rage. It's like hell throbbing in your temples... and you can't let it out. ⚡

At concerts, James Hetfield smirked and called it "a song about hunting"... 😼 But we know: this is a hymn to an inner storm, where every riff is a step on a blade.

Inspired by Diamond Head's "Dead Reckoning" and imbued with the spirit of Saxon's "Princess of the Night," it became a screaming metal manifesto. 📢

"Battery has a light side and a dark side. And we managed to convey the dark side well."— James HetfieldOn March 3, 1986...
19/03/2026

"Battery has a light side and a dark side. And we managed to convey the dark side well."
— James Hetfield

On March 3, 1986, Metallica released "Battery," the explosive opening track of Master of Puppets. Speed, pressure, and a sense of unstoppable power. ⚔

This is a song about unity: about people becoming one energy in a room. About that very scene of the 80s, where music was louder than rules.

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